1. Main points

There were 3.3 million visits to the UK by overseas residents in April 2018 (11% fewer than in April 2017), 3.5 million visits in May 2018 (3% fewer than in May 2017) and 3.2 million visits in June 2018 (9% fewer than in June 2017).

There were falls in the number of visits compared with a year earlier, but it should be noted that visitor numbers were the highest ever recorded by the survey in the corresponding three-month period of 2017.

Overseas residents spent £1.8 billion on visits to the UK in April 2018 (14% less than in April 2017), £2.0 billion in May 2018 (6% less than in May 2018) and £2.0 billion in June 2018 (11% less than in June 2017).

UK residents made 6.3 million visits overseas in April 2018 (1% fewer than in April 2017), 6.2 million visits overseas in May 2018 (3% more than in May 2017) and 7.4 million visits overseas in June 2018 (2% fewer than in June 2017).

UK residents spent £3.3 billion on visits overseas in April 2018 (7% less than in April 2017), £3.8 billion in May 2018 (16% more than in May 2017) and £4.5 billion in June 2018 (4% less than in June 2017).

2. Things you need to know about this release

Overseas travel and tourism quarterly estimates are revised during the processing of the annual dataset. The most up-to-date and accurate estimates for the previous year’s published quarters can be found in the latest edition of Travel trends.

The International Passenger Survey (IPS) is in the process of transferring outputs from data collected on paper forms to an improved method using tablet computers. Tablet data collection was phased in gradually from September 2017 to April 2018. More background information about the rollout can be found in Travel trends 2017: recent data collection changes and planned methodological changes. For the period covered by this release, almost all data collection was conducted on tablets.

With the new tablets offering the potential to improve the quality of the IPS data collected, discontinuities arising from the introduction of tablet data collection in the IPS were possible. We have therefore worked with academic experts and ONS Methodology to produce a method for detecting any such discontinuities.

We have continued to monitor the results as more data have become available. Analysis so far has found no detectable discontinuities, but some caution is still advised in the interpretation of data in this release. Estimates contained in this bulletin are produced from responses provided by international passengers arriving in and departing from the UK, sampled on our International Passenger Survey (IPS).

Responses to the survey are scaled up to represent all passengers using information on total international passenger traffic for the reporting period.

Estimates are based on interviews conducted when passengers end their visit. Any visits commencing in the reported month but not completed until later are not included in estimates for the reported month.

The reported spend for visits includes any spending associated (excluding fares) with the visit, which occur before, during or after the trip.

Parts of the bulletin refer to countries visited abroad. It should be noted that if a UK resident visited more than one country on a trip abroad, the country recorded as visited in this publication is the country that was visited for the longest period.

Estimates are subject to sampling error and confidence intervals are provided to help you interpret the estimates (see “Accuracy of IPS estimates” in the Quality and methodology section). Further guidance is available about the quality of overseas travel and tourism estimates.

3. What are the main trends in visits and spending?

UK residents consistently make more visits abroad than foreign residents make to the UK. The total amount spent by UK residents during visits abroad is also higher than the total spent by foreign residents visiting the UK. The numbers of visits and the amounts spent vary through the year, with more in the summer. This is the case for both UK residents and overseas residents. However, UK residents show a much sharper peak both in visits and spend during the month of August, which is traditionally the only complete month of the UK school summer holidays.

June 2015 to June 2018

Source: International Passenger Survey – Office for National Statistics

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4. Trends in visits to the UK by overseas residents

The figures used in the commentary in this section are sourced from the following monthly overseas travel and tourism datasets:

Table 1 – Overseas residents' visits to the UK by month

Table 2 – Purpose of overseas residents' visits to the UK by month

Table 5 – Earnings in the UK and expenditure abroad by month

There were falls in the number of visits to the UK by overseas residents in April, May and June 2018, compared with the corresponding periods of 2017. However, visitor numbers were the highest ever recorded by the survey over the corresponding three-month period of 2017. Overall, visitor numbers for this period in 2018 were similar to those recorded for 2015 and 2016.

Overseas residents made an estimated 3.3 million visits to the UK in April 2018, which was 11% fewer than in April 2017. Overseas residents spent £1.8 billion on visits to the UK in April 2018, a decrease of 14% compared with April 2017.

There were an estimated 3.5 million visits to the UK by overseas residents in May 2018, which was a decrease of 3% compared with May 2017. Overseas residents spent £2.0 billion on visits to the UK in May 2018, which was 6% less than in May 2017.

The estimated number of visits to the UK by overseas residents in June 2018 was 3.2 million, which is a decrease of 9% compared with June 2017. Overseas residents spent £2.0 billion in the UK in June 2018, a decrease of 11% when compared with June 2017.

During the period April to June 2018, there were 10.0 million visits to the UK; that is, 8% fewer than the corresponding period a year earlier. Holiday visits fell by 8% to 4.3 million for this period.

For the period April to June 2018, spend in the UK by overseas residents decreased 10% on the previous year to £5.8 billion.

Table 1: Main visit and spending estimates for overseas residents' visits to the UK in June 2018

Overseas residents' visits to UK

Visits
(thousands)

% change
from year
earlier

Earnings
(£ million)

% change
from year
earlier

Non seasonally adjusted

June 2018

3,234

-9

2,008

-11

Apr to June 2018

10,040

-8

5,840

-10

Year to date 2018

17,870

-7

10,290

-5

Latest 12 months

37,900

-3

23,940

+0

Seasonally adjusted

Jan

2,960

-13

1,970

-6

Feb

3,220

+1

2,000

-1

Mar

3,420

-2

2,320

+11

Apr

3,190

-13

1,980

-14

May

3,050

-2

1,940

-6

June

3,050

-8

1,780

-11

Source: International Passenger Survey - Office for National Statistics

June 2015 to June 2018

Source: International Passenger Survey – Office for National Statistics

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The figures used in the commentary in this section are sourced from the following monthly overseas travel and tourism datasets:

Table 3 – UK residents’ visits abroad by month

Table 4 – Purpose of UK residents' visits abroad by month

Table 5 – Earnings in the UK and expenditure abroad by month

There were an estimated 6.3 million visits overseas by UK residents in April 2018, which was a decrease of 1% compared with April 2017. UK residents spent £3.3 billion on visits overseas in April 2018, which was 7% less than in April 2017.

UK residents made an estimated 6.2 million visits overseas in May 2018, which was 3% more than in May 2017. They spent £3.8 billion on these visits, an increase of 16% compared with May 2017.

The estimated number of visits abroad by UK residents in June 2018 was 7.4 million, a decrease of 2% when compared with June 2017. UK residents spent £4.5 billion during these visits, a decrease of 4% when compared with June 2017.

During the period April to June 2018, there were 19.9 million visits abroad by UK residents, the same number as in the corresponding period a year earlier, and they spent 1% more on these visits.

Split by area of visit, there were 1.1 million visits to North America, an increase of 12%, and 2.5 million visits to “other countries” (countries outside North America and Europe), a decrease of 11%. Visits to European countries increased by 1%, to 16.2 million. Considering reasons for visits, holiday visits increased by 3% compared with the same period a year earlier. Business visits decreased by 9% and visits to friends and relatives decreased by 1%.

Table 2: Main visit and spending estimates for UK residents' visits abroad in June 2018

UK residents' visits abroad

Visits
(thousands)

% change
from year
earlier

Expenditure
(£ million)

% change
from year
earlier

Non seasonally adjusted

June 2018

7,357

-2

4,472

-4

Apr to Jun 2018

19,870

+0

11,630

+1

Year to date 2018

33,190

-2

11,630

+0

Latest 12 months

71,970

-1

44,810

-1

Seasonally adjusted

Jan

5,960

-2

3,710

+3

Feb

5,870

-5

3,680

-9

Mar

5,800

-6

3,930

+2

Apr

6,080

+0

3,560

-6

May

6,080

+3

3,900

+17

Jun

6,050

-4

3,870

-6

Source: International Passenger Survey - Office for National Statistics

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Figure 4: UK residents' visits abroad by month

June 2015 to June 2018

Source: International Passenger Survey – Office for National Statistics

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6. Links to related statistics

Travel trends: the latest publication (Travel trends 2017) was published on 17 August 2018, the next publication (Travel trends 2018) will be published in May 2019 – this provides final overseas travel and tourism estimates and more detailed analysis of visits and spending, including analysis by demographics, towns visited in the UK and countries visited by residents of different parts of the UK.

Travelpac is a dataset that allows you to conduct your own analyses of quarterly and annual data on main variables – the datasets are provided in SPSS and Excel.

Overseas travel and tourism quarterly: the latest publication (for Quarter 2 (April to June) 2018) was published today on 11 October 2018 – this provides more detailed analysis of visits and spending, isolating aspects such as countries of visit, mode of travel used, nationality of visitors and regions of the UK visited; Quarter 4 (October to December) 2017 figures can be found in Travel trends 2017.

Overseas travel and tourism monthly: the previous publication (January, February and March 2018) was published on 5 September 2018 – this provides provisional results of visits to the UK by overseas residents, visits abroad by UK residents and spending by travellers, using provisional passenger traffic data.

Accuracy of IPS estimates

Figures for the most recent months are provisional and subject to revision in light of more accurate data on passenger figures becoming available at the end of each quarter and additional passenger data obtained at the end of each year.

International Passenger Survey (IPS) monthly estimates are revised in line with the IPS revisions policy. The revisions policy is available in the IPS Quality and Methodology Information report, to assist you in the understanding of the cycle and frequency of data revisions. You are strongly advised to read this policy before using these data for research or policy-related purposes.

Planned revisions usually arise from the receipt of revised passenger traffic data. Unplanned revisions are made to correct errors to existing data, identified later in the quarterly and annual processing cycle. Those of significant magnitude will be highlighted and explained.

Revisions to published monthly IPS estimates can be expected at the following times in the normal overseas travel and tourism publication schedule:

monthly estimates for the current reference year will usually be revised and statistically benchmarked across the quarter, following the publication of the quarterly estimates which that month falls within

monthly and quarterly estimates for the current reference year will be revised in the survey year’s annual data release (Travel trends)

monthly estimates for the full calendar year will be statistically benchmarked as part of the annual data processing and the monthly estimates for the year will then be replaced in the monthly release, with the benchmarked estimate following publication of the annual report (Travel trends)

All other revisions will be regarded as unplanned and will be dealt with by non-standard releases. All revisions will be released in compliance with the same principles as other new information. Please refer to our guide to statistical revisions.

Seasonally adjusted figures are no longer shown in the main figures in the publication, but continue to be presented in the tables.

The estimates produced from the IPS are subject to sampling errors that occur because not every traveller to and from the UK is interviewed on the survey. Sampling errors are determined both by the sample design and by the sample size: generally speaking, the larger the sample supporting a particular estimate, the proportionately lower its sampling error. The survey sample size is approximately 20,000 per month. However, as the intensity of the sampling varies at each port, figures of a similar magnitude will not necessarily have the same percentage sampling error.

Accuracy of the estimates is expressed in terms of confidence intervals. The confidence interval is a range within which the true value of a proportion lies with known probability. For example, the 95% confidence interval represents the range into which there are 19 chances out of 20 that the true figure would fall had all passengers been sampled. This is obtained as plus or minus 1.96 multiplied by the standard error.

Table 3: Confidence intervals relating to overseas travel and tourism estimates in April, May and June 2018

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One indication of the reliability of the main indicators in this release can be obtained by monitoring the size of revisions. Table 4 records the size and pattern of revisions to the quarterly IPS data that have occurred over the last five years to the following main seasonally adjusted estimates:

the number of visits by overseas residents to the UK (GMAT)

the number of visits abroad by UK residents (GMAX)

earnings made from overseas residents in the UK (GMAZ)

expenditure abroad by UK residents (GMBB)

Table 4: Revisions to quarterly International Passenger Survey data over the last 5 years

Revisions between first publications and estimates 3 years later

Value in the
latest period
(2018 quarter 2,
April to June 2018)

Averages over
the last 5 years
(bias)

Average over
the last 5 years
without regard to sign
(average absolute
revision)

GMAT

9,290

46.00

103.00

GMAX

18,200

206.00

291.00

GMAZ

5,710

*111.5

*146.5

GMBB

11,330

*135.5

*181.5

Source: International Passenger Survey - Office for National Statistics

Notes:

1. Units: GMAT and GMAX in thousands.

2. A statistical test has been applied to find out if the revision to each key indicator is statistically different from zero. An asterisk (*) indicates where the mean revision has been significantly different from zero.

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Note that estimates are subject to revision between the monthly statistical bulletin and the quarterly publication, and again when Travel trends is published. Revisions result from more accurate passenger figures being made available. More information about the IPS revisions policy is available in the Quality and Methodology Information report. The most up-to-date and accurate estimates for all published months can be found in the latest edition of the Overseas travel and tourism monthly statistical bulletin.

Note that, although data by the IPS feed into the calculation of migration statistics, the overseas travel and tourism publications do not provide any information relating to international migration.